Miscellaneous thoughts and discoveries on genealogy, family history and family photos.

A Family Photo Jackpot

Grandpa Ted was into scrapbooking long before it became fashionable.You’d never have guessed it from looking at him, though.To all appearances, he was just a hard-working blue-collar guy, owner of a small printing business, and father of six.But Ted had a lifelong passion for family history and spent many years obsessively collecting family photos and assembling them into scrapbooks that he kept in the basement.

As a kid, I got to visit Grandma and Grandpa Sexton’s house often, and always made a beeline for the corner of the basement that was Ted’s unique collection of knick-knacks, books, novelty liquor bottles and old photos.I spent many hours poring over the old books and scrapbooks that jammed the shelves.I didn’t know who most of the people in the scrapbook photos were—Grandpa just said that they were all uncles, aunts and cousins.But I was fascinated by the old photos from the 1930s and 1940s and the hours that I spent in Grandpa Ted’s basement kindled my passion for family history.

The Bemidji Twelve

Born in 1902, Ted was the second of twelve children.The family lived in Bemidji, Minnesota, where Ted’s father worked as a foreman at a lumber mill.Ted’s mother was the family’s anchor, somehow raising a dozen kids and getting the family through the depression on the little income that they had.

Ted and his siblings were always close. Over the years, many of them moved down to the Twin Cities, but continued to spend time together and to see each other often. Ted was a key part of the family’s social life, often traveling to visit siblings, uncles, aunts and cousins. He was a consummate storyteller as well, as were many of his brothers and sisters.

But Ted also had a passion for collecting family mementos—especially photographs. He hung onto every photo that anyone ever sent him and many of them ended up in his large scrapbooks in the basement.

I heard stories, years later, of some family members even getting a little angry with Ted when they’d discover some photo of theirs in one of his scrapbooks, which he had “borrowed” years ago. The joke was that if you ever let Ted get his hands on one of your photos, you’d likely never see it again.

Ted was also the publisher of a small newspaper and, later, the owner of a local printing company. It was no surprise then that his passion for collecting family photos led him to publish, in 1964, a bound book of family photos. Ted printed lots of copies and gave them to everyone in the family, so we all grew up with at least one copy of of this book of family photos at home.

The book—which we all referred to as the “green book” because of its green cover—contained about a hundred black and white photos. They were in no particular order, but each was neatly labeled, indicating the name of everyone in the photo. Like most of my cousins, I learned over the years to identify uncles, aunts and cousins by studying the green book and matching faces with names. By 1964, when the book was published, there were 62 direct descendants of Ted’s parents, including 27 first cousins (my Dad’s generation) and 23 2nd cousins.

By 1997, almost exactly 100 years after Ted’s parents were married, the number of their direct descendants had grown to 109, including 70 2nd cousins (my generation). Ted had passed away in 1980, but his passion for family history was still alive, in all of the stories that the family continued to tell about “the Bemidji Twelve”. (Four of the original twelve siblings were still alive in 1997).

It was also in 1997 that Ted’s son Jerry, now owner of the original printing business, decided to publish an updated version of the 1964 “green book”. The new book, entitled “The Minnesota Connection”, was reminiscent of the original, with a green cover, similar size, and a couple hundred family photos. It ended up being over 300 pages long and included not only photos, but detailed family data, as well as lots of personal stories that people shared about relatives who had passed on.

The book was a massive undertaking. Uncle Jerry financed the project and recruited my cousin Dan, along with his wife, to edit the book and to generate most of the content. The most time-consuming task for them was in writing letters to ask people to share their photos, and in collecting, organizing and scanning all of the photos that they received.

Family members were extremely generous in the photos that they sent. Many people sent large manila envelopes, filled with photos spanning many years. So it was also a challenge to select the subset of photos to include in the book.

The Minnesota Connection

After many months of hard work by my cousin and his wife, The Minnesota Connection went to press. As his father Ted had done 30 years earlier, Uncle Jerry printed lots of copies and distributed them to the entire family. The new “green book” was beautiful, with a full color cover, professionally bound, and containing lots more photos and content than the 1964 version.

For me, the new book of family photos reignited a passion for family history that had been dormant since childhood. In the years following its publication, I got more and more excited about transferring the contents of the book to a permanent web site. I planned on starting with the photos from the green book and then letting people add photos of their own to the web site.

But I led a very busy life and it wasn’t until early 2007 that I finally got around to calling my cousin Dan to find out if he had a digital copy of all of the photos that they had scanned back in 1997.

To my surprise, Dan said that he wasn’t sure what happened to the digital copies, but he still had all of the original photos that went into the book. He’d always intended to return them, but had never gotten around to it.

I was excited at the prospect of being able to rescan these photos and then share them online with the rest of the family. I went to meet Dan at his business and he took me into a warehouse space at the back of his building, where he had several huge shelves filled with boxes and crates. Dan said that all of the photos were up on the top shelf.

The top of the shelving was 10-12 feet off of the ground, so Dan went to grab a ladder and then climbed up and started handing boxes down to me. At first, I figured that he wasn’t exactly sure which box the photos were in. But suddenly it hit me—every box that he handed down was full of family photos!

I had been expecting just a few manila envelopes containing the photos that ended up in the green book. Instead, Dan had all of the photos that people sent him in 1997. This alone amounted to many hundreds of photos. But it didn’t stop there. The boxes in Dan’s back room were filled with Grandpa Ted’s entire photo and scrapbook collection!

As I continued to open box after box to see what we had, I just got more and more excited. There were some truly wonderful treasures in Ted’s collection. He had stacks and stacks of photos going back 60-70 years. And we also found several scrapbooks that I had never seen, full of even older photos of extended family members.

I had hit the family history jackpot—a huge collection of original photos, most of which no one had seen in years. I figured that there must have been something like several thousand photos in all.

It gradually dawned on me the project that lay ahead of me. This was no longer a matter of just scanning a couple hundred photos. Instead, I was looking at a major project that would take up the next few years. I was starting to become giddy with the idea of scanning, identifying, and cataloguing this huge collection.

I also realized what a huge responsibility this was, and what an honor. As it turned out, Dan trusted me enough with the photos to let me take the entire collection home. I promised him that I’d start scanning the photos right away and we could then come up with a plan for preserving the originals.

As I write this, it’s been a year and a half since I brought Ted’s collection home and started working through it. So far, I’ve scanned and identified close to 1,000 photos. I’ve published everything to our family site on ancestry.com and have been able to start sharing the photos with other family members.

Although I have a lot of work ahead of me, I’m committed to the mission of preserving for future generations this amazing collection of family photos and history. This is the kind of project that every family historian dreams of tackling. I’m also truly thankful to Grandpa Ted for his passion for collecting and preserving these photos. It’s because of him that we now have access to such a wonderful collection of family memories.

3 Responses

Hey Sean!! This is great! What a lot of hard work! In the photo of the 5 adults standing by the side of the house, is that Grandma & Grandpa Sexton on the left? Don’t see many photos of Grandma standing as she had venous stasis in her later years with open wounds and could not stand nor walk. Wow!!